Launched in 2014, Art+Feminism is a campaign to improve coverage of women and the arts on Wikipedia, and to encourage feminist editorship. On March 4, 2016, in honor of Women's History Month, join us for a communal updating of Wikipedia entries on feminist artists, feminist curatorial practices, feminist art pedagogy, and other subjects related to contemporary art and feminism absent from Wikipedia.
Please bring a laptop with you!
When this happens / Then that happens = Working Wisdom
A presentation by Susan Hill from 11:00 AM -12:00 PM on March 4, 2016 in 207 Arts Cottage.
On March 4th, visiting artist to Penn State, Susan Hill will share her experiences of teaching, writing, art making, and community making. Susan Hill was a principle artist with Judy Chicago in developing and creating the monumental art work, The Dinner Party (1975-79). Susan contributed the idea of needlework / embroidered runners, became Head of Needlework for the project, training and collaborating with scores of workers who helped design and produce each hand-worked textile in the studio. Hill co-authored with Chicago, “Embroidering our Heritage: The Needlework of The Dinner Party” (1980, Doubleday), and is narrator of Johanna Demetrakas’ documentary film, Right Out of History (1980, Johanna Demetrakas, 75 min).
After working with Judy Chicago to create The Dinner Party, and while traveling with the exhibition, Hill was Community Outreach staff for SPARC ( Social and Public Art Resource Center) with muralist and SPARC founder Judy Baca. At that time, The Great Wall mural was in production, depicting the history of Los Angeles from the point of view of the people rarely included in the history, engaging historians, community residents, educators, and working teams of artists and local young people.
From 1980 to 2005, Susan Hill was the Director of Artsreach, a non-profit organization based at UCLA, producing artist residency programs with teams of multi-disciplinary, multi-lingual artists, working collaboratively with institutionalized populations and marginalized urban constituencies. Mentors for Hill in this work included theatre director/educator Augusto Boal, the Geese Theatre Company, Dr. James, Lawson, Jr., a principle organizer and strategist of non-violent change for Dr. King during the Civil Rights Movement, and the study of dream images with Dr. Stephen Aizenstat (Pacifica Graduate Institute).
Hill is also the author of a needlework textbook for a PBS education series (Los Angeles Daytime Emmy), former instructor at Otis College of Art and Design, in Los Angeles, and has been a teaching Artist in Residence in California working with older adults, incarcerated adults and juveniles, pregnant teens, teen parents, and inner city first generation children.
Susan Hill, along with Dr. Karen Keifer-Boyd, professor of Art Education and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Penn State, coordinator of the Penn State Art+Feminism edit-a-thon, and scholar of feminist art pedagogy, will also facilitate discussion with the group to identify emergent interests and issues specific to the participants in order to focus Wikipedia entries, in asking what is missing or misinformed in Wikipedia entries on feminist art teaching, writing, art making, and community making.
The Penn State edit-a-thon is sponsored by the University Libraries, the College of Arts and Architecture, and Wikimedia District of Columbia. The event is also supported by Penn State's Women's Studies Graduate Organization and the Graduate Art Education Association.
Below is a list of articles that would benefit from edits and expansion during the edit-a-thon, but you are welcome to work on anything you like. Please note: This is a crowdsourced list. You can help us by adding to it!
To improve:
Alphabetical by first letter
Sign here to help us learn more about how users interact with Wikipedia! If you sign up, we can observe how your username uses the Wikimedia projects during and after this event. This will help us to better measure the effectiveness of this event and similar programs. This means that your publicly available activity and the information you share with us during this event may be processed by the Wikimedia Foundation, Art+Feminism, and the organizers of the local event, and may be transferred to or from the US and other countries that may not have the same level of privacy regulation that your country does. However, we will not share your information with third parties or publicly unless it's in aggregated or anonymized form.
Prior to the event:
{{
cite web}}
: Missing or empty |title=
(
help)
Launched in 2014, Art+Feminism is a campaign to improve coverage of women and the arts on Wikipedia, and to encourage feminist editorship. On March 4, 2016, in honor of Women's History Month, join us for a communal updating of Wikipedia entries on feminist artists, feminist curatorial practices, feminist art pedagogy, and other subjects related to contemporary art and feminism absent from Wikipedia.
Please bring a laptop with you!
When this happens / Then that happens = Working Wisdom
A presentation by Susan Hill from 11:00 AM -12:00 PM on March 4, 2016 in 207 Arts Cottage.
On March 4th, visiting artist to Penn State, Susan Hill will share her experiences of teaching, writing, art making, and community making. Susan Hill was a principle artist with Judy Chicago in developing and creating the monumental art work, The Dinner Party (1975-79). Susan contributed the idea of needlework / embroidered runners, became Head of Needlework for the project, training and collaborating with scores of workers who helped design and produce each hand-worked textile in the studio. Hill co-authored with Chicago, “Embroidering our Heritage: The Needlework of The Dinner Party” (1980, Doubleday), and is narrator of Johanna Demetrakas’ documentary film, Right Out of History (1980, Johanna Demetrakas, 75 min).
After working with Judy Chicago to create The Dinner Party, and while traveling with the exhibition, Hill was Community Outreach staff for SPARC ( Social and Public Art Resource Center) with muralist and SPARC founder Judy Baca. At that time, The Great Wall mural was in production, depicting the history of Los Angeles from the point of view of the people rarely included in the history, engaging historians, community residents, educators, and working teams of artists and local young people.
From 1980 to 2005, Susan Hill was the Director of Artsreach, a non-profit organization based at UCLA, producing artist residency programs with teams of multi-disciplinary, multi-lingual artists, working collaboratively with institutionalized populations and marginalized urban constituencies. Mentors for Hill in this work included theatre director/educator Augusto Boal, the Geese Theatre Company, Dr. James, Lawson, Jr., a principle organizer and strategist of non-violent change for Dr. King during the Civil Rights Movement, and the study of dream images with Dr. Stephen Aizenstat (Pacifica Graduate Institute).
Hill is also the author of a needlework textbook for a PBS education series (Los Angeles Daytime Emmy), former instructor at Otis College of Art and Design, in Los Angeles, and has been a teaching Artist in Residence in California working with older adults, incarcerated adults and juveniles, pregnant teens, teen parents, and inner city first generation children.
Susan Hill, along with Dr. Karen Keifer-Boyd, professor of Art Education and Women’s, Gender, and Sexuality Studies at Penn State, coordinator of the Penn State Art+Feminism edit-a-thon, and scholar of feminist art pedagogy, will also facilitate discussion with the group to identify emergent interests and issues specific to the participants in order to focus Wikipedia entries, in asking what is missing or misinformed in Wikipedia entries on feminist art teaching, writing, art making, and community making.
The Penn State edit-a-thon is sponsored by the University Libraries, the College of Arts and Architecture, and Wikimedia District of Columbia. The event is also supported by Penn State's Women's Studies Graduate Organization and the Graduate Art Education Association.
Below is a list of articles that would benefit from edits and expansion during the edit-a-thon, but you are welcome to work on anything you like. Please note: This is a crowdsourced list. You can help us by adding to it!
To improve:
Alphabetical by first letter
Sign here to help us learn more about how users interact with Wikipedia! If you sign up, we can observe how your username uses the Wikimedia projects during and after this event. This will help us to better measure the effectiveness of this event and similar programs. This means that your publicly available activity and the information you share with us during this event may be processed by the Wikimedia Foundation, Art+Feminism, and the organizers of the local event, and may be transferred to or from the US and other countries that may not have the same level of privacy regulation that your country does. However, we will not share your information with third parties or publicly unless it's in aggregated or anonymized form.
Prior to the event:
{{
cite web}}
: Missing or empty |title=
(
help)